Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Cover-up!

     A nut for journals, I started a self-portrait-a-day and learned a few things. I like to create each one in a new medium. My first surprise was working in black Akua intaglio ink from Speedball. You just roll this ink on a Gelli plate, put a soft cloth on your finger and wipe. You can work with semi-stiff brushes as well on this monotype.A beautiful demonstration of this is Art Professor Demos Gelli Plates & Monotype Printmaking - YouTube.I highly recommend the viewing on YouTube by Art Prof: Create and Critique. So Pro!  Eager to use the medium and clean up with only baby wipes, I messed up the nose and mouth. Solution: paint on a mask. I need some shadows and a design for the fabric. (Click to enlarge)


    Next I thought I would try a watercolor as the first piece in my journal. I find watercolor not easy, but I did this in about ten minutes before bedtime with my little acryla gouache portable paint kit. I felt free, and I thought it a sweet effort. You don't want all portraits to look the same and certainly not like me!


     The important thing is to leave paper and tools out so you can do art work ten minutes a day. I had a block about going into the studio to paint. Then I read something that made me think it is more important to paint or draw lots (quantity over quality) and not worry about what anyone thinks. This has been so much fun to just create and not worry about any comments. Periodically, quality will appear! Waiting, waiting! I have also started to work on some stitching-on-paintings projects to share later. 


2 comments:

  1. I think the water color does look like you! But I didn't realize your hair was that long. I need to follow those links to truly understand how you did the first one. Great suggestion to do some sort of art daily so as to not get rusty! Keeping supplies out and handy is a super good tip. I know what you mean about having those blocks that we often use as an excuse not to produce anything!

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  2. 10 minutes! You soar! says this nonpainter/drawer. I admire your discipline almost as much as your final product of those minutes. I'm trying to put pen to paper--or fingers to keyboard in the same way.

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